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Space Weather

Dr. Ugur GUVEN

Definition of Space Weather

• Space weather is the concept of changing environmental conditions in near-Earth space or the space from the Sun's atmosphere to the Earth's atmosphere.

• Space weather is the description of changes in the ambient plasma, magnetic fields, radiation, and other matter in space. Much of space weather is driven by energy carried through interplanetary space by the solar wind from regions near the surface of the Sun and the Sun's atmosphere (chromosphere and corona)

Geomagnetic Storm• A geomagnetic storm is a temporary disturbance of the

Earth's magnetosphere.• Associated with solar coronal mass ejections, coronal

holes, or solar flares, a geomagnetic storm is caused by a solar wind shock wave which typically strikes the Earth's magnetic field 24 to 36 hours after the event.

• The increase in the solar wind pressure initially compresses the magnetosphere and the solar wind's magnetic field interacts with the Earth’s magnetic field and transfers an increased energy into the magnetosphere

Particles Emitted in Magnetic Storms

Effects of Space Weather

Effect of Space Weather in Ground Systems

• Disruption of GPS and other spacecraft signals

• Disruption of long-distance radio signals

• Effect of radiation on humans at and near ground level

• Ground Induced Current: electrical transmission, pipelines

• Effect of space weather on terrestrial weather

Effect of Space Weather in Space Systems

• Spacecraft anomalies

• Spacecraft orbit changes

• Effect of radiation on humans in space

Navigational Effects• Ships at sea require good navigation signals to

stay on route. • Navigation errors can lead to wasted fuel,

groundings and spilled cargo.• Plane navigation will also be effected.

Radio Signals Effects

• Radio signals can get lost and absorbed, bounce and miss the receivers.

• Especially communication over the poles will be problematic.

Electric Power Effects• Transformers can be damaged by geomagnetic

storms

• Blackouts can be widespread.

Pipeline Effects• Pipelines can corrode due to geomagnetic storms.

This corrosion can cause loss and damage

History of Space Weather

Helioseismology• The science studying wave oscillations in the

Sun is called helioseismology.• For the Sun, no one source generates solar

"seismic" waves. The sources of agitation causing the solar waves that we observe are processes in the larger convective region. Because there is no one source, we can treat the sources as a continuum, so the ringing Sun is like a bell struck continually with many tiny sand grains.

• On the Sun's surface, the waves appear as up and down oscillations of the gases, observed as Doppler shifts of spectrum lines. If one assumes that a typical visible solar spectrum line has a wavelength of about 600 nanometers and a width of about 10 picometers, then a velocity of 1 meter per second shifts the line about 0.002 picometers

• In helioseismology, individual oscillation modes have amplitudes of no more than about 0.1 meters per second.

Oscillation Modes of the Sun

• The three different kinds of waves that helioseismologists measure or look for are: acoustic, gravity, and surface gravity waves.

• These three waves generate p modes, g modes, and f modes, respectively, as resonant modes of oscillation because the Sun acts as a resonant cavity.

• The spectrum of the detected oscillations arises from modes with periods ranging from about 1.5 minutes to about 20 minutes and with horizontal wavelengths of between less then a few thousand kilometers to the length of the solar globe

Spherical Harmonics of the Sun

• Oscillation modes use spherical harmonics: l, and m, and n values. The spherical harmonic functions provide the nodes of standing wave patterns. The order n is the number of nodes in the radial direction. The harmonic degree, l, indicates the number of node lines on the surface, which is the total number of planes slicing through the Sun. The azimuthal number m, describes the number of planes slicing through the Sun longitudinally.

Harmonics• The figure on the left shows spherical harmonic numbers l = 6

and m = 0. The dark regions are the nodal boundaries, the green colors denote areas moving radially outward, and yellow colors show those areas moving radially inward.

• The figure on the right shows spherical harmonic numbers l = 6 and m = 3. The dark regions are the nodal boundaries, the green colors denote areas moving radially outward, and yellow colors show those areas moving radially inward

Oscillation and Velocity

• It is possible to get the velocity picture of the sun by analyzing the transmission of the waves across its surface.

Solar Dynamo• From the looping shape of fiery

solar flares, to the varying intensity of the solar winds, to the mysterious 11-year sunspot cycle, large-scale events on the surface of the Sun are controlled by strong magnetic fields generated deep in its interior.

• This region extends to a layer 38,000 miles thick and centered at a depth of about 135,000 miles below the solar surface. In this region, they have found evidence for two conditions indicative of the dynamo's presence: a high level of turbulence and shear flows caused by changes in rotation rate.

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